cooper] 



BIBLIOGEAPHY OF TRIBES OP TIERRA DEL FUEGO 



127 



Shufeldt, Robert Wilson — Continued 

 Stuttgart, 1900, ii, no. 23, pp. 441-444, 

 464-467.) 



A summary, chiefly of Yahgan culture, based 

 on Darwin, Bove, Hyades. 



Siemiradzki, Josef von 



(a) Beitriige zur Ethnographie der 

 siidamerikanischen Indianer. (In Mitt. 

 Anthr. Ges., Wien, 1898, xxviii, n. s. 

 xviii, 127-170.) 



Contains (pp. 128-129, 134) suggestions regard- 

 ing the kinship and cultural relations of the 

 Fuegians to other South American aborigines. 



(b) Mieszkancy Zienii Ogniowej. 

 [Die Volkerstamme des Feuerlandes.] 

 (In Wszechswiat, Warschau, xiii, 81-83.) 

 (Reference from P. L. Phillips, p. 72.) 



Sievers, Wilhelm 



Slid- und Mittelamerika, 2d ed., 

 Leipzig- Wien, 1903. 



Contains a few data on the Fuegian tribes 

 See pp. 87, 327-329, 366. Not important; some 

 inaccuracies, especially in the account of the 

 Onas. 



Silva A., L. Ignacio 



See Anrique. 

 Simonot 



Sur la relation d'un voyage de M. de 

 Rochas aux terres magellaniques et a 

 I'lle Rossel. (In Bull. Soc. d'anlhr. de 

 Paris, 1862, in, 118-133.) 



A r&ume of M. de Rochas' account, followed 

 by a discussion (pp. 133-138) by MM. Broca, de 

 Quatrefages, Gosse, d'Avezac, Simonot, I'runer- 

 Bey; no important conclusions reached. 



Simpson, Enrique M. 



Exploraciones hechas por la corbeta 

 Chacabuco en los archipielagos de 

 Guaitecas, Chonos i Taitao. (In An.- 

 hidr. mar. Chile, Santiago, 1875, i, 

 3-166.) 



Contains (pp. 18, 43, 114) a few notes on the 

 Chonos. The writer found no Chonos in the 

 three archipelagos, except one family in the 

 Guaitecas Islands. The "vocabulario Payo i 

 antiguo Chono" given on p. 104 is Araucanian. 



Simpson, Juan M., and Chaigneau, J. 

 Federico 



(a) Estudio de la parte oriental de 

 las aguas de Skyring por los tenientes 

 ... en octubre i noviembre de 1877. 

 (In An. hidr. viar. Chile, Santiago, 1879, 

 V, 47-56.) 



Contains (p. 51) a statement that they saw a 

 bark canoe at Lorca Cove in Skyring Water, but 

 no natives. 



Simpson, Juan M., and Chaigneau, J. 

 Federico — Continued 



(b) Diario llevado por los tenientes 

 Simpson i Chaigneau. (Ibid., 1880, 

 VI, 73-96.) 



Contains (pp. 86-88) a few notes on the mate- 

 rial culture of some natives met near Mt. Dyne- 

 vor in Skyring Water on Feb. S, 1879. Of special 

 interest is the short vocabulary (p. 88) of IS 

 words and the first 8 numerals taken by signs 

 from one of the natives who seemed to be more 

 intelligent than the rest. About one-half of the 

 IS words can be identified as clearly Alacalufan. 



Skottsberg, Carl Johan Fredrik 



(a) The Swedish Magellanian expe- 

 dition, 1907-1909: Preliminary reports. 

 (In Geogr. jour., London, 1908, xxxi, 

 640-645, xxxii, 485-488, 591-594, 1909, 

 xxxiii, 289-294, xxxiv, 409-421.) 



The antlu'opological results (xxxii, 591-594) 

 are given much more fully in the three following 

 studies. 



(6) Einige Beobachtungen iiber die 

 Eingeborenen Westpatagoniens nach 

 Studien wilhrend der schwedischen 

 Expedition 1907-1909. (In Ymer, 

 Stockholm, 1910, xxx, 240-274.) 



An important article on the somatology and 

 culture of the West Patagonian Chaimel Alaca- 

 luf. Dr. Skottsberg gives, in addition to ex- 

 tensive cultm'al data gathered at first-hand, the 

 measurements of 6 men and 5 women (pp. 250- 

 256). The account on pp. 270-273 of the Gulf of 

 Penas natives is based on information given by 

 a certain Capt. Steele, a sailing boat master, met 

 in the vicinity of the Gulf. Dr. Skottsberg's 

 criticism thereupon seems in the main to be well 

 tustaiaed, but further investigation of these 

 natives themselves would be most desiiable. 

 The Skottsbeig expedition encountered none 

 north of Port Grappler. Eighteen good photo- 

 graphs and cuts in text. 



(c) The wilds of Patagonia: A narra- 

 tive of the Swedish expedition to Pata- 



. gonia, Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland 

 Islands in 1907-1909, London, 1911. 



Contains (pp. 91-103) approximately the same 

 cultural material as the Ymer article, but lacks 

 the Steele narrative and the anthropometrical 

 data, and is written with less detail, as the book 

 is intended for the general reader. There are 

 also some slight references (especially pp. 35, 

 306-30S) to the other Fuegian tribes. Many good 

 photographs and cuts. 



(d) Observations on the natives of 

 the Patagonian Channel region. (In 

 Amer. anthr., 1913, n. s. xv, no. 4, 

 pp. 578-616.) 



An important contribution to Fuegian lin- 

 guistics. This article contams the same cultural 



